North County Transit District and Logicalis Drive to
build the First Mass Transit LEED Green Certified Interior Data
Center in the U.S.
North County Transit District (NCTD) serves 12 million
passengers annually by providing public transportation within North
San Diego County and, via the Coaster commuter rail service, to
downtown San Diego. Its family of transit services includes the
Breeze bus system, the Coaster commuter rail service, Lift
paratransit and the Sprinter light rail.
As with most regional transit systems, demands on the NCTD data
center were increasing dramatically. The space available for the
data center, however, was not. Tucked into the basement of a former
bank building, the data center was already crammed with
systems—including a legacy prime mainframe. Power consumption was
going up ten percent a year, and still, the two relatively new air
conditioning systems were unable to keep the temperature within an
acceptable range.
Big Problem. Small Room.
Chief Technology and Sustainability Officer Angela K. Miller
faced a big problem in a small room; actually, she faced several
problems: she had an IT problem, a construction problem, an energy
consumption problem, and a space problem, and while she was solving
those, she had to ensure that tickets were sold online, security
cameras kept an eye on things and trains and busses kept running on
schedule. And, of course, she had a tight budget.
Undaunted, Miller took the term "sustainability" in her title
very literally and was determined to demonstrate that there was a
creative and sustainable "green" solution to all her problems. She
envisioned a new data center that would meet the escalating demands
for information technology and be environmentally, as well as
financially, sustainable.
"We think of ourselves in public transit as being a greener
transportation alternative, so it is important to us to demonstrate
that we can live up to that in other ways," Miller says. "The
emphasis in public transit has always been on the vehicles: trains
and buses. The industry is just now realizing how big a role IT has
to play in its future. It’s important to show that IT can and
should play a leadership role in energy efficiency and
sustainability as well."
Miller’s vision helped the NCTD win a Transportation Investment
Generating Economic Recovery (TIGER) grant from the Department of
Transportation to upgrade its data center. The responses to her
subsequent request for a proposal, however, solved only some of her
problems. Only the response from Logicalis shared her vision of how
to solve them all.
LEED Certification
Logicalis data center infrastructure expert Bob Mobach worked
closely with Miller to develop a design from the ground up that
would not only meet the service-level demands of the NCTD data
center for the next 15 years but would also incorporate the best
ideas from a variety of sources that met the full intent of the
Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) Certification
for Commercial Interior Spaces.
Developed by the U.S. Green Building Council, LEED certification
provides third-party verification that a building is designed and
built using strategies that improve performance in terms of energy
savings, water efficiency, CO2 emission reduction, improved indoor
environmental quality, stewardship of resources and sensitivity to
their impacts.
"We adhered to the guidelines and applied for LEED
certification," Miller says, "because we didn’t want to just come
out and say, ‘Okay we’re green now,’ and be viewed as green
washing. Not only were we the first agency in San Diego county to
qualify for LEED certificate for a commercial interior, we are the
first green data center in public transit…actually, we’re the only
LEED-certified public transit data center in the country. Some have
built LEED facilities with a data center in it, but that’s not the
same as retrofitting an existing data center."
Going Green
Going green added an extra dimension to the data center design.
Besides the exacting technical specifications to optimize the
space, Mobach and Miller closely evaluated every aspect of the
design according to its environmental impact, from re-cycling waste
during construction to incorporating materials that met tight
environmental standards.
As the design took shape, Mobach reviewed submissions and quotes
and pulled together the team of contractors that would be needed to
complete the renovation: Roel Construction acted as the general
contractor. BASmith Design Associates provided architectural design
and LEED administration, and Prime Electric handled the electrical
wiring. Following the spirit of sustainability, local products were
used as much as possible throughout.
During the construction phase, the Logicalis team took care of
space planning, sizing the components, re-cabling and migrating
servers to new cabinets.
"We basically had to gut the existing data center and implement
a new one in the existing footprint without interrupting service,"
recalls Logicalis’ Mobach.
The existing raised floor was eliminated and replaced with
electrostatic tiles, and the Prime mainframe was relocated to a
separate room and has since been retired. Besides improving air
circulation and making it possible to wire the systems from above,
removing the raised floor effectively gave the room a
much-appreciated additional eight inches of headroom.
The data center remained in full operation throughout the
upgrade, except for one very busy weekend when it had to be shut
down to complete the transition.
Showcase for Sustainability
The new data center design not only provides for projected
service demands for the next 15 years but also serves as a showcase
for sustainability. The ceiling panels are made from bamboo, and
the insulation in the walls is made from recycled blue jeans. LED
lighting and low-VOC paint were used throughout. The design even
stipulated low-flow toilets. Because the building is in a Zone-4
earthquake region, the design also called for threaded rods using
cross members that directly connected each cabinet to the floor to
keep them from being upset in an earthquake.
Energy savings from the new in-row hot-aisle containment air
conditioning system, combined with energy production from the solar
panel array installed on the roof, contributes to a reduction in
the NCTD’s energy demand by more than 30 percent a year—enough to
provide a respectable return on investment (ROI) from energy
savings alone.
The integration of data center infrastructure design and
sustainable green technology is already winning accolades for NCTD
and for Miller, who was presented the "Cox Business Exemplary
Award" at the San Diego Business Journal’s annual Information
Technology Executive of the Year event.
"The little train that could."
"It’s one thing to do this if you’re Google or Micro-soft or
Citibank, and I applaud them for getting platinum LEED
certifications. But we’re the little train that could," Miller
says.
"Public transit often has really old facilities. We’re a
government agency, but we’re not unlike a lot of SMBs. Somebody
else may be more glamorous, but we’re on the ground demonstrating
the viability of a small company learning from all the innovative
things the big guys do and making an economic and socially
responsible investment. Building a sustainable data center is not
about being part of a political movement or creating a press sound
bite," Miller adds. "It’s about making an investment that will
endure, be supportable and save operating dollars."
"As public transit increasingly depends more and more on
technology services, IT will demand a bigger cut of the cost pie,"
Miller says. "Logicalis has helped us prove that it is possible for
a relatively small agency to design and retrofit an existing data
center in a way that reduces its environmental impact and reduces
cost at the same time. That’s good for us. It’s good for the
transit industry, and it’s good for the environment."
Testimonial
"Logicalis has helped us prove that it is possible for a relatively small agency to design and retrofit an existing data center in a way that reduces its environmental impact and reduces cost at the same."
Angela K. Miller, North County Transit District